Acta Med Okayama
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The interaction of four inhalational anesthetics (sevoflurane, isoflurane, enflurane and halothane) with pancuronium and vecuronium and also their prejunctional actions at the neuromuscular junction were quantitatively studied using rat phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm preparations. To investigate the prejunctional effects of inhalational anesthetics, a train-of-four ratio (T4/T1) and the tetanus ratio (the ratio of the final response to the initial response during tetanus) were evaluated. All four inhalational anesthetics markedly potentiated the neuromuscular blockade of twitch response caused by either pancuronium or vecuronium with halothane and enflurane being the most potent both on a % concentration basis and on a MAC (minimum alveolar concentration) basis. ⋯ Sevoflurane had little effect on the tetanus ratio, whereas 1 and 2% isoflurane and 1, 2 and 3% enflurane increased the tetanus ratio and 5% halothane and 5% enflurane significantly reduced the tetanus ratio. Halothane and enflurane had the most potent depressant action of the four inhalational anesthetics both on the % concentration basis and on the MAC basis. These results indicate that the main site of action of inhalational anesthetics is a postjunctional site at the neuromuscular junction and that they do not seem to act on prejunctional sites at the concentrations used in clinical situations.